Here are some more images of Trumpeter's 1/32 scale Chinese F-7 MG.
From Wikipedia" The Chengdu Jian-7 (Chinese: 歼-7; export versions F-7) is a People's Republic of China-built version of the Soviet Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21. Though production ceased in 2008 it continues to serve, mostly as an interceptor, in several air forces.
In the 1950s and early 1960s, the Soviet Union shared most of its conventional weapons technology with the People's Republic of China. One of these was the limited cooperation between the two countries in the early stage development of the famous MiG-21 short-range interceptor-fighter aircraft.
  Powered by a single engine and designed on a simple airframe, these  
fighters were inexpensive but fast, suiting the strategy of forming  
large groups of 'people's fighters' to overcome the technological  
advantages of Western aircraft. However, the Sino-Soviet split ended Chinese early participation in the developmental program of the MiG-21
  abruptly, and from July 28 to September 1, 1960, the Soviet Union  
withdrew its advisers from China, resulting in the project being forced 
 to stop in China.
 
However, Nikita Khrushchev suddenly wrote to Mao Zedong in February, 1962 to inform Mao that the Soviet Union was ready to transfer MiG-21 technology to China and asked the Chinese to send their representatives to the Soviet Union
  as soon as possible to discuss the details. The Chinese viewed this as
 a  Soviet gesture to make peace, and were obviously suspicious, but 
they  were extremely quick to take up on the Soviet offer for the 
aircraft  deal. A delegation headed by Colonel General Liu Yalou (刘亚楼), the commander-in-chief of the PLAAF and a Soviet military academy graduate was dispatched to Moscow immediately and the Chinese delegation was even allowed to have three days to visit the production facility of the MiG-21, which was previously off limits to foreigners. The authorization was personally given by Nikita Khrushchev
  himself, and on March 30, 1962, the deal was signed. However, given 
the  political situation and relationship between the two countries, the
  Chinese were not optimistic about gaining the technology and thus were
  prepared for reverse engineering.
 
Russian
 sources stated that complete examples of the MiG-21 were sent  to China
 flown by Soviet pilots, and China did receive MiG-21Fs in kits  along 
with parts and technical documents. Just as the Chinese had expected, when the Soviets delivered the kits, parts and documents to Shenyang Aircraft Factory
  five months after the deal was signed the Chinese discovered that the 
 technical documents provided by the Soviets were incomplete and some of
  the parts could not be used.
  China set about to reverse engineer the aircraft for local production,
  and in doing so, succeeded in solving 249 major problems and came up  
with eight major technical documents that were not delivered. The effort
  was largely successful, as the Chinese design showed only minor  
differences from the original. In March, 1964, Shenyang Aircraft Factory
  began the first domestic production of the jet fighter, which they  
successfully achieved the next year. However, the mass production of the
  aircraft was severely hindered by an unexpected problem—the Cultural  
Revolution, which resulted in poor initial quality and slow progress,  
which in turn, resulted in full scale production only coming about in  
the 1980s, by which time the design was showing its age. However, the  
fighter is affordable and widely exported as the F-7, often with Western
  systems incorporated like the ones sold to Pakistan. Based on the  
expertise gained by this program, China later developed the Shenyang J-8 by utilizing the incomplete technical information of the Soviet Ye-152 developmental jet.
 
 






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